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PSYC 2001 Exam 4 (Chapter 14 Knapp) Questions and Answers 2026

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psychological disorders patterns of thoughts, feelings, or actions that are deviant, distressful, and dysfunctional: not helpful to us or others Fill in the blank: About _______ percent of adults in the US display some form of disorder in a 1 year period. About _____ percent of people under 18 30 percent 20 percent criteria for mental disorders 1. statistical rarity/infrequency 2. subjective distress 3. impairment 4. societal disapproval/norm violation 5. biological dysfunction statistical rarity if very few people do it, it is disordered; Whatever most people do is normal. short comings: - Some rare behaviors are valuable; ex: genius IQ is rare or joe burrow's really good football throw - This is saying normality is conformity; nonconformity is often creative - Just how rare does the behavior have to be? - Whatever you could come up with is an arbitrary cuttoff subjective distress if the person experiences distress or causes distress to others around, it must be disordered. shortcomings: - People may be distressed over behaviors not considered abnormal; ex - homosexuality - Some people are not distressed by disorders (es: NAMBA) impairment Most mental disorders interfere with people's ability to function in everyday life. These disorders can destroy marriages, friendships, and jobs. shortcomings: - Could be unrelated to mental illness - Ex: laziness, physical dysfunction. societal disapproval/norm violation Norm violation equates abnormality with violations of social norms and cultural rules. shortcomings: - Eccentric/illegal rather than abnormal - can be weird without being a mental illness

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PSYC 2001 Exam 4 (Chapter 14 Knapp)
Questions and Answers 2026

psychological disorders

patterns of thoughts, feelings, or actions that are deviant, distressful, and
dysfunctional: not helpful to us or others

Fill in the blank:
About _______ percent of adults in the US display some form of disorder in a 1
year period.
About _____ percent of people under 18

30 percent
20 percent

criteria for mental disorders

1. statistical rarity/infrequency
2. subjective distress
3. impairment
4. societal disapproval/norm violation
5. biological dysfunction

statistical rarity

if very few people do it, it is disordered; Whatever most people do is normal.


short comings:
- Some rare behaviors are valuable; ex: genius IQ is rare or joe burrow's really
good football throw

PSYC 2001

, Page |2


- This is saying normality is conformity; nonconformity is often creative
- Just how rare does the behavior have to be?
- Whatever you could come up with is an arbitrary cuttoff

subjective distress

if the person experiences distress or causes distress to others around, it must be
disordered.


shortcomings:
- People may be distressed over behaviors not considered abnormal; ex -
homosexuality
- Some people are not distressed by disorders (es: NAMBA)

impairment

Most mental disorders interfere with people's ability to function in everyday life.
These disorders can destroy marriages, friendships, and jobs.


shortcomings:
- Could be unrelated to mental illness
- Ex: laziness, physical dysfunction.

societal disapproval/norm violation

Norm violation equates abnormality with violations of social norms and cultural
rules.


shortcomings:
- Eccentric/illegal rather than abnormal - can be weird without being a mental
illness

PSYC 2001

, Page |3


- Social norms vary across cultural/historical eras
- Norm violations does not mean behavior is "bad"

biological dysfunction

breakdowns or failures of physiological systems. For example, we'll learn that
schizophrenia is often marked by an underactivity in the brain's frontal lobes.


shortcomings
- Some mental disorders such as phobias appear to be acquired largely through
learning experiences and often require only a weak genetic predisposition to trigger
them

historical conceptions of mental illness (3)

1. demonic model
2. medical model
3. moral treatment

demonic model

Possession by gods or demons


dominant during the Middle Ages. supernatural explanations still invoked in
certain ethnic and religious subcultures
treatments were often barbaric = trephination

trephination

drilling holes in the skull to let out the spirit; barbaric

medical model



PSYC 2001

, Page |4


mental illness is treated the same as physical illness


As the renaissance took hold, views of those with mental illness became more
enlightened. More people came to perceive mental illness primarily as a physical
disorder requiring medical treatment

asylums

places to warehouse people with mental disorders; not to treat them; people would
visit the asylums like people going to the zoo; unclean, underfunded

assumptions of mental illnesses under the medical model

i. Behaviors such as hallucinations are 'symptoms' of mental illness, as are suicidal
ideas or extreme fears such as phobias about snakes, etc.


ii. Different illnesses can be identified as 'syndromes', clusters of symptoms that go
together and are caused by the illness.


iii. These symptoms lead the psychiatrist to make a 'diagnosis' for example 'this
patient is suffering from a severe psychosis, he is suffering from the medical
condition we call schizophrenia'.


iv. The model assumes biological causes, pathology of the brain, germs or genes.

Moral treatment

advocates insisted those with mental illness be treated with dignity, kindness, and
respect.


Before this, patients in asylums were often bound in chains, but following moral

PSYC 2001

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